Experimental Rheumatology (272), Radboud University Medical Center, PO Box 9101, 6500HB, Nijmegen, The Netherlands.
Centre for Molecular and Biomolecular Informatics, Radboud Institute for Molecular Life Sciences, Radboud University Medical Center, Nijmegen, The Netherlands.
Microbiome. 2017 Jun 23;5(1):63. doi: 10.1186/s40168-017-0278-2.
Perturbation of commensal intestinal microbiota has been associated with several autoimmune diseases. Mice deficient in interleukin-1 receptor antagonist (Il1rn mice) spontaneously develop autoimmune arthritis and are susceptible to other autoimmune diseases such as psoriasis, diabetes, and encephalomyelitis; however, the mechanisms of increased susceptibility to these autoimmune phenotypes are poorly understood. We investigated the role of interleukin-1 receptor antagonist (IL-1Ra) in regulation of commensal intestinal microbiota, and assessed the involvement of microbiota subsets and innate and adaptive mucosal immune responses that underlie the development of spontaneous arthritis in Il1rn mice.
Using high-throughput 16S rRNA gene sequencing, we show that IL-1Ra critically maintains the diversity and regulates the composition of intestinal microbiota in mice. IL-1Ra deficiency reduced the intestinal microbial diversity and richness, and caused specific taxonomic alterations characterized by overrepresented Helicobacter and underrepresented Ruminococcus and Prevotella. Notably, the aberrant intestinal microbiota in IL1rn mice specifically potentiated IL-17 production by intestinal lamina propria (LP) lymphocytes and skewed the LP T cell balance in favor of T helper 17 (Th17) cells, an effect transferable to WT mice by fecal microbiota. Importantly, LP Th17 cell expansion and the development of spontaneous autoimmune arthritis in IL1rn mice were attenuated under germ-free condition. Selective antibiotic treatment revealed that tobramycin-induced alterations of commensal intestinal microbiota, i.e., reduced Helicobacter, Flexispira, Clostridium, and Dehalobacterium, suppressed arthritis in IL1rn mice. The arthritis phenotype in IL1rn mice was previously shown to depend on Toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4). Using the ablation of both IL-1Ra and TLR4, we here show that the aberrations in the IL1rn microbiota are partly TLR4-dependent. We further identify a role for TLR4 activation in the intestinal lamina propria production of IL-17 and cytokines involved in Th17 differentiation preceding the onset of arthritis.
These findings identify a critical role for IL1Ra in maintaining the natural diversity and composition of intestinal microbiota, and suggest a role for TLR4 in mucosal Th17 cell induction associated with the development of autoimmune disease in mice.
共生肠道微生物群的紊乱与几种自身免疫性疾病有关。缺乏白细胞介素-1 受体拮抗剂(Il1rn 小鼠)的小鼠自发地发展为自身免疫性关节炎,并且易患其他自身免疫性疾病,如牛皮癣、糖尿病和脑脊髓炎;然而,对这些自身免疫表型易感性增加的机制知之甚少。我们研究了白细胞介素-1 受体拮抗剂(IL-1Ra)在调节共生肠道微生物群中的作用,并评估了涉及固有和适应性黏膜免疫反应的微生物亚群的作用,这些反应是 Il1rn 小鼠自发关节炎发展的基础。
我们使用高通量 16S rRNA 基因测序表明,IL-1Ra 对维持小鼠肠道微生物群的多样性和调节其组成至关重要。IL-1Ra 缺乏降低了肠道微生物多样性和丰富度,并导致特定的分类学改变,特征为 Helicobacter 过度代表,而 Ruminococcus 和 Prevotella 减少。值得注意的是,IL1rn 小鼠的异常肠道微生物群特异性地增强了肠道固有层(LP)淋巴细胞的 IL-17 产生,并使 LP T 细胞平衡向辅助性 T 细胞 17(Th17)细胞倾斜,这种效应可通过粪便微生物群转移到 WT 小鼠。重要的是,在无菌条件下,IL1rn 小鼠 LP Th17 细胞的扩张和自发性自身免疫性关节炎的发展减弱。选择性抗生素治疗表明,托布霉素诱导的共生肠道微生物群改变,即 Helicobacter、Flexispira、Clostridium 和 Dehalobacterium 的减少,抑制了 IL1rn 小鼠的关节炎。IL1rn 小鼠的关节炎表型以前依赖于 Toll 样受体 4(TLR4)。通过 IL-1Ra 和 TLR4 的双重缺失,我们在此表明,IL1rn 微生物群的异常部分依赖于 TLR4。我们进一步确定了 TLR4 激活在关节炎发作前诱导肠道固有层产生 IL-17 和参与 Th17 分化的细胞因子中的作用。
这些发现确定了 IL1Ra 在维持肠道微生物群自然多样性和组成中的关键作用,并表明 TLR4 在与小鼠自身免疫性疾病发展相关的黏膜 Th17 细胞诱导中发挥作用。